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Last fall, Kelsey Street hosted a much needed, intimate and bountiful somatic writing workshop

entitled “The Poetics of Pleasure” with the ferociously generous Amber DiPietra. The workshop was so profound on many levels. KSP’s Carla Hall described the event as provocative and noted the way she resonated with Amber’s embodied approach and use of somatics. I think this is something the entire group felt though the quiet, the listening, through the shared vibrations

felt and shared throughout the space. I’m so grateful to have witnessed the unfolding of work generated both within our shared space and in the weeks, months since. We discussed the 53 Senses, Elizabeth Hassler read a poem and I was awe-stricken with the line, “desire is all object” ... Such deep and intimate sharing occurred, and I was touched to see so many faces and hear

many voices from Australia, Bogota Columbia, small villages in New York to California and all the places between. 


I loved opening the Kelsey Street email to Rosemary Caroll’s video poem “ON Shimeros,” ephemera from Linda Russo’s notebook, and going back to the shared links, poems, and sounds Amber introduced.







Resources in the workshop:

Amber DiPietra, the body poetik




Books:

Books by Corey Silverberg (Sex is a Funny Word, What Makes a Baby, The Ultimate Guide to Sex and Disability)


Poems:





Join us on Friday, September 24, 2021 at 6pm (PST) to celebrate the release of deposition | dispossession: Climate Change in the Sundarbans, the posthumously published work by Marthe Reed. deposition | dispossession (with an introduction by Angela Hume), responds to the ecological crises of the Sundarbans of south Bangladesh and India. The work “talks back” to climate denialism, questioning Reed’s own and the United States’ role in climate change and its collateral damage.


This virtual event will feature contributions by Laura Mullen, Angela Hume, Bhanu Kapil, Kimberly Alidio, Mark Lamoureux, Anastacia-Reneé, and others.









A big thank you to all writers that submitted manuscripts to Kelsey Street Press’s first QTBIPOC prize. We are overjoyed to have read so many compelling and subversive submissions.


Kelsey Street’s editorial team had a difficult time narrowing down the 120+ submissions to the final seven, which speaks to the quality of all the work submitted. Indeed, Metta Sáma, this year’s judge, has much to deliberate.


We wish the following seven finalists much luck and look forward to announcing a winner of the prize in the coming weeks.


jayy dodd, Getting Hungry

Jai Dulani, Language We Fall Through

Mihee Kim, Nomenclature

Vuyelwa Maluleke, Falling Towards the Centre

Ansley Moon, Register the Missing

Maggie Rhee-Reclamation or My Body Instead

Ximena Keogh Serrano, The Glow in Our Spilling


Kelsey Street Press' QTBIPOC Contest is a free book contest open to a QTBIPOC-identified feminist, innovative writer/poet. The winning manuscript will be chosen by Metta Sáma, author of Swing at your own risk (Kelsey Street Press, 2019). The prize winner will receive publication along with a $1,000.00 cash award to help aid in book promotion, travel, event attendance, and a general contribution to the hopes of thriving as an artist. Along with book publication and cash prize, Ching-in Chen, winner of the 2018 Lambda Literary Award for Best Transgender Poetry for recombinant (Kelsey Street Press, 2017), will serve as editor along with a Kelsey Street Press collective member.


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